❌

Normal view

Yesterday β€” 18 April 2026Main stream

The NFL Defined What a Football Problem Is. Mike Vrabel Didn't Qualify

The league did not clear Mike Vrabel. It decided he was not a football problem. Credit: @patriots/Instagram

The asymmetry is no longer implied. The NFL made it official.

Dianna Russini resigned from The Athletic while the nature of her relationship with Mike Vrabel, her coverage of the Patriots, and whether she misled her employer were all under active review. Crissy Froyd lost her USA Today contract after publicly posting about Russini. The NFL looked at the broader situation and decided Vrabel is not its problem.

That is not the league clearing him after a formal investigation. That is the league deciding he doesn't qualify for one.

The NFL looked at the mess and shrugged

The personal conduct policy is written broadly. It covers coaches, owners, and team employees β€” not just players β€” and requires everyone in the league to refrain from conduct detrimental to the integrity of and public confidence in the NFL. The league does not need a criminal charge to invoke it. It just needs the will to treat something as a league issue.

Credit: NFL Personal Conduct Policy PDF / NFLPA-hosted document

It chose not to.

That choice matters more than whatever people think the photos prove, because it defines what the league treats as its business.

NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy told ESPN that Vrabel's behavior is not being reviewed under the conduct policy. A Patriots spokesman did not answer whether the team itself would conduct any review. That ESPN report also contained something the personal conduct announcement didn't address: Russini and Vrabel coordinated their responses to the New York Post before publication, and Russini appealed directly to New York Times CEO Meredith Kopit Levien to plead her case as The Athletic's investigation expanded.

The Athletic took that context seriously enough to keep investigating. The league looked at the same public situation β€” one that triggered a media crisis, a resignation, a firing, and days of national coverage β€” and decided it did not even warrant a review. So if you were wondering where accountability stops, there it is. Somewhere between the newsroom and the sideline.

None of this proves illegal conduct. Russini and Vrabel both said the photos didn't accurately reflect their interaction, and no criminal allegation has been made. But the policy doesn't require a police report. It requires the league to decide whether something threatens public confidence in the NFL. The league decided it didn't.

Credit: @benjstrauss, @curiousme165823 via X

Zolak said what everyone around Vrabel already knows

Scott Zolak understood the ecosystem before the league confirmed it.

The Patriots analyst, who also works on the team's flagship radio station and its game broadcasts, said he would not comment because, in his own words, "I like my jobs." He added that casting stones at Vrabel would not do him any great things. That is not a moral defense. It is an incentive structure speaking in plain English.

Zolak matters here not because he exposed a hidden truth, but because he accidentally explained the whole arrangement. A Patriots-adjacent figure knows exactly how this works. Commenting costs something. Staying quiet costs nothing. The NFL just reinforced that same logic from the top down. No review. No conduct case. No football consequence.

That doesn't make Zolak uniquely cowardly. It makes him honest about where the lines are. And the lines are ugly.

Zolak did not really defend Vrabel. He explained the incentive structure. Credit: @bostonmedia617/X

The personal conduct policy was only real on paper

On the media side, everything became a crisis. The Athletic's review expanded as new questions emerged. Russini resigned rather than continue under what she called a public inquiry unmoored from the facts. Froyd was fired for comments USA Today said violated its standards of professionalism and ethical conduct.

On the football side, the answer was essentially: move along.

That is why this conduct policy decision matters more than another round of coverage about what did or didn't happen in Sedona. It transforms the league's posture from implied to explicit. The NFL didn't investigate and announced there was nothing to see. It chose not to make seeing a priority in the first place.

The photos started the scandal. The league’s non-response told you what mattered. Credit: Page Six/X

Football treats image problems as issues only when they threaten games, money, or legal exposure. This one threatened media institutions, not Sundays. So the media side convulsed, and the football side shrugged.

That is not proof that the NFL condones whatever people believe happened in Arizona. It is evidence that the league has a narrow definition of what constitutes a threat to its integrity. A coach's relationship with an NFL reporter β€” and the cascading institutional fallout across multiple media companies β€” apparently doesn't qualify.

Vrabel is expected to address reporters next week at the NFL draft. It will be his first public appearance since all of this unfolded. The questions he faces will tell you whether any of this actually cost him anything.

When the people around him stay silent because they like their jobs, they are not failing to understand the system. They are describing it.

Before yesterdayMain stream

USA Today Fired Crissy Froyd for a Russini Post. It Had Already Published the Polite Version

Credit: FanDuel/Wikimedia Commons; Crissy Froyd/Instagram

Dianna Russini resigned. Mike Vrabel kept coaching. Then Crissy Froyd got fired for talking about it.

That is the NFL media mess's scoreboard, which refuses to stay contained. What began as leaked resort photos of Russini and Patriots coach Mike Vrabel has now turned into a second workplace casualty at USA Today Sports. The more this story expands, the harder it is to pretend the rules are only about ethics.

USA Today drew the line after the line had already moved

Froyd, an NFL writer who worked with USA Today Sports on a contract basis, responded to Russini's resignation with a blunt X post. She said Russini's alleged conduct damaged women in sports who had done things "the right way." She also made more serious claims about Russini's relationships and reputation inside NFL media.

I’m sure you were told to submit this or that you’d get fired instead.

Don’t let the door hit you on the way out. We know who you really are and what you’ve been up to for years. It does so much detriment to women in sports who have done things the right way. https://t.co/dswaHZjIHL

β€” Crissy Froyd (@crissy_froyd) April 14, 2026

Those claims have not been independently verified. Froyd may believe every word. That does not make every word publishable as fact. NBC Sports put it plainly: the things Froyd said have not been verified or officially reported by any entity.

USA Today moved fast. The company posted that it had ended its contractor relationship with Froyd effective immediately, saying her statements did not reflect its commitment to professionalism or uphold its principles of ethical conduct.

On paper, that is defensible. A media company does not have to keep paying a contractor who posts unverified allegations about another journalist. But this is where the story gets uglier.

Credit: @usatodaysports/X

The polished version was already on the website

Days before Froyd was fired, USA Today had already published Nancy Armour's opinion column arguing that Russini put the credibility of all women in sports at risk.

Armour did not make Froyd's most explosive claims. She wrote a vetted column through an editorial process, and that matters. Froyd fired from the hip on X. Armour wrote inside the machine.

But the broad argument was sitting right there: Russini's situation harmed women in sports media because it fed an ugly stereotype about how women build access in male-dominated locker rooms and front offices.

USA TODAY says this is ok but my comments aren’t??

Ok. pic.twitter.com/9O0sJGW4nb

β€” Crissy Froyd (@crissy_froyd) April 17, 2026

That is why Froyd's follow-up landed. After USA Today cut ties with her, she pointed at the outlet's opinion coverage and asked how its published argument could live on the site while her version got her fired.

She has a point. Not a clean one. But a real one.

USA Today's rule was not simply "do not discuss Russini." The outlet was already discussing Russini. The rule was closer to this: discuss her through approved channels, with approved language, inside approved liability boundaries.

Sports media punishes the uncontrolled woman first

Russini resigned after The Athletic's review expanded and "new questions" were raised about her work and relationship with Vrabel. Vrabel, who called any suggestion of impropriety "laughable," stayed in his job. Now Froyd is gone too, after saying publicly what she says others had been whispering privately.

That does not prove Froyd was right. It proves sports media is very good at disciplining women once a scandal becomes visible.

Russini was punished by appearances. Froyd was punished by language. Vrabel is still being handled like a football problem, which means the standard is slower and easier to duck. Football waits for outcomes. Media runs from optics.

Froyd leaned into the firing. She said she regretted none of what she wrote and stood beside it. She also warned that she hoped other women would not feel unable to speak out because she had been "reprimanded."

Credit: @crissy_froyd/X

That word is doing work. Reprimanded sounds small. What happened was bigger. She lost a gig for entering a conversation her own outlet had decided was worth publishing.

The real rule is control

USA Today can argue Froyd crossed a line. It probably has the better legal argument there. Unverified personal claims on social media are not the same as an edited opinion column, and pretending they are identical would be lazy.

But pretending there is no contradiction is worse.

The outlet could publish a column saying Russini endangered the credibility of women in sports. It could monetize the debate and let readers fight over whether that framing was sexist, fair, or both. What it could not tolerate was a contractor saying the messier version in public.

Sports media wants access without admitting how access works. It wants opinion without the mess opinion creates. It wants women to defend standards, but only in a tone the institution can invoice safely.

The rule was never "don't talk about Russini." USA Today already did. The rule was "don't talk about Russini in a way we can't control."

❌
❌